Prospective Comparison of Geriatric Assessment and Provider’s Assessment of Older Adults With Metastatic Breast Cancer in the Community
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Journal articleDate
2022-02-10Author
Seedor, Rino S.Meeker, Caitlin R.
Lewis, Bianca
Handorf, Elizabeth A.
Filchner, Kelly A.
Varadarajan, Ramya
Hensold, Jack
Padmanabhan, Aruna
Negin, Benjamin
Blankstein, Kenneth
Chawla, Neha R.
Song, Wei Frank
Epstein, Jessica
Winn, Jennifer
Goldstein, Lori J.
Dotan, Efrat
Group
Fox Chase Cancer Center (Temple University)Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/9336
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyab032Abstract
Background: Geriatric assessment (GA) is recommended for evaluating fitness of an older adult with cancer. Our objective was to prospectively evaluate the gaps that exist in the assessment of older adults with metastatic breast cancer (OA-MBC) in community practices (CP). Methods: Self-administered GA was compared to provider’s assessment (PA) of patients living with MBC aged ≥65 years treated in CP Providers were blinded to the GA results until PA was completed. McNemar’s test was used to detect differences between PA and GA. Results: One hundred patients were enrolled across 9 CP (median age 73.9). Geriatric assessment detected a total of 356 abnormalities in 96 patients; of which, 223 required interventions. African American and widowed/single patients were more likely to have abnormalities identified by GA. On average, across 100 patients, PA did not detect 25.5% of GA-detected abnormalities, mostly in functional status, social support, nutrition, and cognition. These differences were less pronounced among providers with more clinical experience. Patients with abnormal Timed Up and Go tests more likely had additional abnormalities in other domains, and more abnormalities that were not identified by PA. Providers were “surprised” by GA results in 33% of cases, mainly with cognitive or social support findings, and reported plans for management change for 39% of patients based on GA findings. Conclusions: Including a GA in the care of OA-MBC in CP is beneficial for the detection of multiple abnormalities not detected by routine PA.Citation
Rino S Seedor, Caitlin R Meeker, Bianca Lewis, Elizabeth A Handorf, Kelly A Filchner, Ramya Varadarajan, Jack Hensold, Aruna Padmanabhan, Benjamin Negin, Kenneth Blankstein, Neha R Chawla, Wei (Frank) Song, Jessica Epstein, Jennifer Winn, Lori J Goldstein, Efrat Dotan, Prospective Comparison of Geriatric Assessment and Provider’s Assessment of Older Adults With Metastatic Breast Cancer in the Community, The Oncologist, Volume 27, Issue 2, February 2022, Pages e133–e141, https://doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyab032Citation to related work
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